FBI is said to gather data with help of hackers

Wednesday

Apr 23, 2014 at 9:38 PM

By Mark Mazzetti THE NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON — An informant working for the FBI coordinated a 2012 campaign of hundreds of cyberattacks on foreign websites, including some operated by the governments of Iran, Syria, Brazil and Pakistan, according to documents and interviews with people involved in the attacks.

Exploiting a vulnerability in a popular Web hosting software, the informant directed at least one hacker to extract vast amounts of data — from bank records to log-in information — from the government servers of a number of countries and upload it to a server monitored by the FBI, according to court statements.

The details of the 2012 episode have, until now, been kept largely a secret in closed sessions of a federal court in New York and heavily redacted documents. While the documents do not indicate whether the FBI directly ordered the attacks, they suggest that the government may have used hackers to gather intelligence overseas even as investigators were trying to dismantle hacking groups like Anonymous and send computer activists away for lengthy prison terms.

The attacks were coordinated by Hector Xavier Monsegur, who used the Internet alias "Sabu" and become a prominent hacker within Anonymous for a string of attacks on high-profile targets including PayPal and MasterCard. By early 2012, Monsegur, of New York, had been arrested by the FBI and already spent months working to help the bureau identify other members of Anonymous, according to previously disclosed court papers.

One of them was Jeremy Hammond, then 27, who, like Monsegur, had joined a splinter hacking group from Anonymous called Antisec. The two men had worked together in December 2011 to sabotage the computer servers of Stratfor Global Intelligence, a private intelligence firm based in Austin, Texas.

Shortly after the Stratfor incident, Monsegur, 30, began supplying Hammond with lists of foreign websites that might be vulnerable for sabotage, according to Hammond, in an interview, and chat logs between the two men. The New York Times petitioned the court last year to have those documents unredacted, and they were submitted to the court last week with some of the redactions removed.

"After Stratfor, it was pretty much out of control in terms of targets we had access to," Hammond said during an interview earlier this month at a federal prison in Kentucky, where he is serving a 10-year sentence after pleading guilty to the Stratfor operation and other computer attacks inside the United States. He has not, however, been charged with any crimes in connections with the hacks against foreign countries.

Hammond would not disclose the specific foreign government websites that he said Monsegur asked him to attack, one of the terms of a protective order imposed by the judge. The names of the targeted countries are also redacted from court documents. But according to an uncensored version of a court statement by Hammond, leaked online the day of his sentencing in November, the target list was extensive and included more than 2,000 Internet domains. The document said that Monsegur directed Hammond to hack government websites in Iran, Nigeria, Pakistan, Turkey, Brazil and other government sites like the Polish Embassy in Britain and the Ministry of Electricity in Iraq.

An FBI spokeswoman declined to comment, as did lawyers for Monsegur and Hammond.

The hacking campaign appears to offer further evidence that the U.S. government has exploited major flaws in Internet security — so called "zero-day" vulnerabilities like the recent Heartbleed bug — for intelligence purposes. Recently, the Obama administration decided it would be more forthcoming in revealing the flaws to industry, rather than stockpiling them until the day they are useful for surveillance or cyberattacks. But it carved a broad exception for national security and law enforcement operations.

Hammond, in the interview, said that he and Monsegur had become aware of a vulnerability in a web-hosting software called Plesk that allowed backdoor access to thousands of websites. Another hacker alerted Hammond to the flaw, which allowed Hammond to gain access to computer servers without needing a user name or password. Over several weeks in early 2012, according to the chat logs, Monsegur gave Hammond new foreign sites to penetrate. During a Jan. 23 conversation, Monsegur told Hammond he was in search of "new juicy targets," the chat logs show. Once the websites were penetrated, according to Hammond, emails and databases were extracted and uploaded to a computer server controlled by Monsegur.

The sentencing statement also said that Monsegur directed other hackers to give him extensive amounts of data from Syrian government websites. "The FBI took advantage of hackers who wanted to help support the Syrian people against the Assad regime, who instead unwittingly provided the U.S. government access to Syrian systems," the statement said.

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